New York Post

HE’S ONLY HUMAN

Leg woes, former team stand between Peyton and shot at another title

- Steve Serby steve.serby@nypost.com

D ENVER — Peyton Manning has rehabbed a right thigh injury, and as he ambles closer to his 39th birthday, it sure has looked of late as if onrushing Father Time is beginning to give him happy feet in the pocket.

Manning does not want to stop playing any less than Tom Coughlin wants to stop coaching, but the old gunslinger’s window is closing once again, for the umpteenth time, and wee watch him Sundday against Andrew Luck andd his old team suddenly wonndering whether he can be Muhhammad Ali rope-a-doping and willing his way to the end zonee, one small step for Mann, one giant leap for Mannkind, towaard the latest of Legacy Gammes that would be standing betwween him and that elusive second LLombardi Trophy.

Mille High drama: The proud, weathhered warhorse desperate and ddriven to win the race to the AFC CChampions­hip game against the ammbitious young Colt who sucd ceededsucd him so seamlessly in Indiais. napoliIndi­ais.

Or MMile Thigh drama, given the shroudd of mystery over the truth aboutMMann­ing’s health.

Inquiiring media minds may have wantedd to know, but the best we could hhave hoped for anyway was another Robert Mueller investigat­ion.

It would be foolish of the Colts, however, to expect Manning to show up for his first playoff game since Seahawks 43, Broncos 8 in Super Bowl XLVIII merely as the game manager he has been, partly by design, since Thanksgivi­ng.

It has been eight years since Manning won his Super Bowl. He has been one-and-done eight times in the playoffs, he is 11-12 in the postseason.

But he’s baaaaaaack again, looking to make history as the f irst quarterbac­k to win Super Bowls with two different franchises, and make his case for greatest of all time.

It has been nearly three years since he was introduced to the football world as a Denver Bronco:

The late Pat Bowlen: “Our goal has always been to win Super Bowls. Peyton gives us a chance to win another championsh­ip.”

John Elway: “What I told him in the process was, my goal is to make Peyton Manning the best quarterbac­k that has ever played the game, and he’s got that ability with the football he has left.”

Manning: “Knowing that I don’t have 15 years left to throwa football, I certainly feel that sense of urgency.”

If he didn’t have 15 years left then, he certainly doesn’t have 15 years left now.

It is why, as soon as the winter of his discontent began, Elway began getting Manning more help. Elway made Denver’s defense tougher and more formidable by adding defensive end DeMarcus Ware, cornerback Aqib Talib and safety T.J. Ward.

He got Manning an upgrade when receiver Eric Decker left for the Jets in Emmanuel Sanders.

And the emergence of C.J. Anderson has filled the shoes left by the departure of Knowshon Moreno and given Manning balance and a sense of comfort — he no longer needs to sling the ball all over the lot and carry the teamon his shoulders.

And Anderson is every bit the passcatchi­ng option out of the backfield that Moreno was a year ago.

As for Luck, is hellbent on reaching his first AFC Championsh­ip. Jim Irsay made the right call when he decided to draft Luck and end the iconic Manning Era in Indianapol­is. Luck just may have 15 years left to throw a football, and win a Super Bowl or two.

But he comes to Peyton’s Place, where Tom Brady bit the dust in last year’s AFC Championsh­ip.

Where there will be no Bill Belichick to worry about for Manning, and no Seahawks defense, and no arctic cold.

He has had an extra week to rest, an extra week to prepare. It gives him a fighting chance to beat the Colts with his arm, but an even better chance to beat them with his beautiful football mind.

He has confronted his own football mortality. He knows better than most how precious these moments are, how you must never take them for granted.

Mile Thigh drama, and I wouldn’t buck the old Bronco this time.

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